Contents
Note on the Series / James G. Lennox
Introduction / Gregory Salmieri
Part One: Reason, Force, and the Foundations of Politics
The Place of the Non–Initiation of Force Principle in Ayn Rand’s Philosophy / Darryl Wright
Force and the Mind / Darryl Wright
The Scope and Justification of Rand’s Non–Initiation of Force Principle / Darryl Wright
Part Two: Rights and Government
Ayn Rand’s Theory of Rights: An Exposition and Response to Critics / Fred D. Miller Jr. and Adam Mossoff
A Critique of Ayn Rand’s Theory of Rights: Response to Miller and Mossoff / Matt Zwolinski
Selfish Regard for the Rights of Others: Continuing a Discussion with Zwolinski, Miller, and Mossoff / Gregory Salmieri
Ayn Rand and Robert Nozick on Rights / Lester H. Hunt
Rand (contra Nozick) on Individual Rights and the Emergence and Justification of Government / Onkar Ghate
Anarchism versus Objectivism / Harry Binswanger
Defending Liberty: The Commonsense Approach / Michael Huemer
Egoism, Force, and the Need for Government: A Response to Huemer / Harry Binswanger
Part Three: Rand and the Classical Liberal Tradition on Intellectual Freedom
A Wall of Separation between Church and State: Understanding This Principle’s Supporting Arguments and Far-Reaching Implications / Onkar Ghate
The Arc of Liberalism: Locke, Mill, and Rand / Robert Garmong
Part Four: The Nature and Foundations of Economic Freedom (and Its Opposite)
Economic Theory and Conceptions of Value: Rand and Austrians versus the Mainstream / Robert Tarr
Mises, Rand, and the Twentieth Century / Peter J. Boettke
The Head, the Heart, and the Ethics of Capitalism: Response to Boettke / Robert Garmong
The Aristocracy of Pull: An Objectivist Analysis of Cronyism / Steve Simpson
Uniform Abbreviations for Rand’s Works
References
Contributors
Index